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Ghazi dead, crisis over, aftermath begins
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Africa North
Bush writes to Gaddafi, backs US-Libya ties
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There is some evidence that Godawful is mentally ill. He is always seen wearing gaudy silk outfits, that wouldn't be out of place at a transvestite ball. Not a good peace partner.
Posted by: McZoid || 07/11/2007 4:48 Comments || Top||

#2  Looks like Dubya wants to [geographically/
politically] isolate Radical Islamism in North Africa = from Egypt by maintaining a US-Western foothold in Libya. Also helps vv Ethiopia and Somalia troubles, etc.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 07/11/2007 21:55 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
286,000 held since emergency declared
Around 286,000 people, including former ministers, lawmakers, political leaders and business tycoons, have been arrested across the country on charges of crime and corruption since the state of emergency was declared on January 11.
Over a quarter million people? My mind just boggled.
That's on a population of 150 million. I think they need to arrest some more.
Of them, police held over 260,000, Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) about 9,000 and the army-led joined forces over 17,000 throughout the country, home ministry sources told the news agency.
That says Bangla's been arresting over 1500 people per day for the past 190 days, with no days off.
Besides, police netted about 2100 firearms, over 1280 other weapons and over 25,000 rounds of ammunition, while Rab seized over 1022 firearms, 17148 rounds of bullet, 423 explosives and 474 other weapons during the drives. The arrested persons also include over 600 "listed criminals" held by police. The high profile arrests were made after Chief Adviser Fakhruddin Ahmed's caretaker government declared war on corruption and criminal godfathers.
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Besides, police netted about 2100 firearms, over 1280 other weapons and over 25,000 rounds of ammunition, while Rab seized over 1022 firearms, 17148 rounds of bullet, 423 explosives and 474 other weapons during the drives.

A large gun store in the US probably has this much stuff--with the exception of the explosives.
Posted by: JohnQC || 07/11/2007 9:24 Comments || Top||

#2  But no shutter gun? Something very fishy here...
Posted by: Admiral Allan Ackbar || 07/11/2007 12:55 Comments || Top||

#3  "But no shutter gun? Something very fishy here.." Nothing fishy at all; the shutter gun is part of the RAB Catch and (do not) Release Program. Think of it as a reusable .44 cal ankle bracelet.....
Posted by: USN, Ret. || 07/11/2007 14:39 Comments || Top||


Ex-whip Suja sued for not submitting wealth report
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Restrictions on movements of Khaleda, Hasina to be tightened
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Tax evasion case against Tuku family shifted to special court
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
BBC: the other guys are biased, send govt money
Posted by: lotp || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Why should the public fund the Fifth Column? That's what George Soros types are for.
Posted by: Cluper Lumumba3694 || 07/11/2007 6:12 Comments || Top||

#2  I refuse to pay the TV-Tax.

Over 10% of people in the UK are refusing to be extorted too.

time to end the idea that extortion funded entertainment can be anything but far left.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 07/11/2007 7:20 Comments || Top||

#3  Any rumors whether the infamous BBC radio detector vans can pick up emissions from LCD TVs? My guess is no since there is no high voltage flyback transformer and tuners are now single chip and easily shielded.
Posted by: ed || 07/11/2007 7:39 Comments || Top||

#4  Auntie Beeb is more like the batty old aunt in the attic these days.
Posted by: Mike || 07/11/2007 9:36 Comments || Top||

#5  Ed, they never existed in the first place.
Posted by: Birght Pebbles || 07/11/2007 10:07 Comments || Top||

#6  I would think the guy saying this about the BBC's rivals would choke on the amount of crap spewing from his mouth....
Posted by: DarthVader || 07/11/2007 10:09 Comments || Top||

#7  Gentlemen! We've got to protect our phoney baloney jobs!!
HARRUMPH HARRUMPH HARRUMPH HARRUMPH...
Posted by: Mark Thompson || 07/11/2007 10:24 Comments || Top||

#8  All your bias are belong to us.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 07/11/2007 10:38 Comments || Top||

#9  NHS and the BBC are the best indicators of why you don't want socialized news reporting or medical care. The answer for BBC is do as PBS stations do - beg for handouts and contributions. Leave it to the audience to decide your worth - either that or go commerical. In some respects Channel 4 is more left-leaning than the Beeb (if that is possible). Sky is the big competitor and with more satellite and cable the Beeb market share is shrinking. Its become basically an inner-city service thus the slant to islamists and socialists.
Posted by: Jack is Back! || 07/11/2007 11:24 Comments || Top||

#10  IIRV, PBC receives a gov't stipend which they funnel down to individual PBS stations. The local PBS stations only do the pledge weeks to fill the remaining $ gap
Posted by: Frank G || 07/11/2007 21:46 Comments || Top||

#11  er...IIRC...dammit
Posted by: Frank G || 07/11/2007 21:51 Comments || Top||


Europe
Germany: Turks to boycott "Integration Summit"
Upset by the government's recent changes to the immigration law, four leading Turkish groups are boycotting an integration summit Thursday called by Chancellor Angela Merkel. But Berlin says the meeting will go ahead.

A summit meant to ease the lives of Germany's estimated 15 million immigrants hit a major hurdle when four Turkish groups representing a chunk of the foreign population threatened to withdraw from talks this week with Chancellor Angela Merkel's government. The groups, who were part of the first such integration summit held last year, say they feel hurt and discriminated against by the government's recent changes to a 2005 immigration law which tightens restrictions on foreign spouses joining their non-German partners in Germany.
"Oh, Achmed, I'm so hurt! Hold me!"
They also say in the spirit of integration the government should have consulted them before making the changes. The groups are now demanding that the government either revoke the changes to the law or else they will boycott the meeting.
And if that doesn't work ...
"We've concluded that it doesn't make any sense to participate in the summit because the German government hasn't understood the seriousness of our concerns and apparently doesn't want to talk about making possible changes to the immigration law," Kenan Kolat, head of the Turkish Association in Berlin and Brandenburg (TGB), told the online version of Der Spiegel on the eve of the summit.

Helga and Horst, but not Ahmed and Aische?

In addition to raising the minimum age for foreign spouses to 18, Germany wants them in future to learn basic German before they enter the country. The aim is to combat forced marriages believed to be widespread among Germany's Turkish community.

Turks make up the largest group among the country's 6.7 million foreigners. But Turkish groups are irked that the regulation only applies to non-Germans. "If Helga and Horst are allowed to get their partners here why not Ahmed and Aische too?" Kolat said. Speaking at a press conference, Kolat added the law amounted to "ethnic discrimination" and applied "double standards."
Brother, the Turks have written the book on "ethnic discrimination" and applied "double standards" - in Turkey
Always a good idea to point out that you'd be happy to make your immigration laws reciporical to the other guy's. We Americans just want our southern border to be patrolled as well as Mexico enforces its southern border. The Germans want their new citizens to speak German as well as the new immigrants in Turkey speak Turkish.

What's that you say, the Turks don't have any immigration? Like I was just saying, simply ask for reciprocity ...
Kolat also raised doubts about the law's effectiveness in fighting forced marriages. He pointed out that the number of brides being imported from Turkey had fallen in recent years. Those who do come in, Kolat said, tended to be better educated.
"We too believe that every forced marriage is one too much and should be severely punished," he said. "But the law is no means to counter forced marriages."
So what alternative does Herr Kolat offer? (crickets)

Government says summit will go ahead

The integration summit on Thursday is one of a number of measures drawn up by Chancellor Angela Merkel's government to reach out to its large immigrant population amid mounting concerns in Europe about radicalization and home-grown terrorism.
They don't need to 'reach out' to their immigrant population, they need to explain how things work ...
German media regularly reports about the poor school performance of children from immigrant families, conflicts over the wearing of the Islamic headscarf and the building of so-called parallel societies in large cities.
Picked right up on that whole parallel society thing, did they? Have they heard of 'sharia'?
The summit, which brings together representatives from the government, migrant groups and independent experts, plans to introduce a weighty "national integration plan" which analyzes the problems of immigrants and includes some 400 voluntary commitments for states and local governments to promote the integration of foreigners. The plan is a result of a year's work by the various groups that are part of the integration summit.
They don't need a weighty immigration plan, they need a simple immigration plan. They can borrow mine: 1) come ready to work 2) learn our language 3) adapt to our customs 4) don't put your hand out for anything 5) make sure your kids become fully assimilated into our society. Simple, no?
German politicians say the threatened boycott by the Turkish groups should not be allowed to disrupt the work achieved so far. "The summit will take place in any case and there will be no empty chairs," said Maria Böhmer, federal commissioner for integration and immigration issues and a member of Merkel's Christian Democratic Party (CDU). "You don't solve problems by staying away, but only when you speak to each other."
In German.
A "self-boycott by the organizations" will not help the 2.5 million Turks in Germany, Böhmer added.
They're staying away from an infidel-sponsored meeting. No haram, no foul.

"Dream of multiculturalism has failed"

The rift between the Turkish groups and politicians ahead of the summit also reflects a tougher attitude in Germany towards immigrants after decades of politicians refusing to accept its status as an immigrant country.
They had no problem with an 'immigrant' country, they just didn't demand that immigrants had to become German.
Böhmer insisted that the new immigration law was not discriminatory and said integration also meant accepting the values and laws of the country that immigrants came to. "The dream of multiculturalism has failed," she said.
Good morning.
Posted by: mrp || 07/11/2007 08:07 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Multiculturalism == Slavery
Slavery->Resentment
Posted by: Admiral Allan Ackbar || 07/11/2007 13:02 Comments || Top||

#2  after decades of politicians refusing to accept its status as an immigrant country

Germany an "immigrant country"? Won't go well with the german notion of nationhood... what a bunch of crap, no european country is an "immigrant country", or at least, was, until the past 30 years or so with massive and unprecendented immigration from alien cultures. There basically has been more immigration to France since 1976 than in the last 2000 years total, and this is not an exageration, and I don't recall reading much about pakistani enclaves in the Shakespeare plays I've studied.

Blood & Soil is what they are and have been all along, not that there anything wrong with that, on the contrary. But the french revolution has blurred the lines, changing the notion of Patrie (patria, nationality defined as a "family", Blood & Soil again, much like the german idea of germanhood) into the one of Nation (the Nation as an idea, a common destiny to which anyone can adhere), and blurred citizenship and nationality. And in fact nationalism is a creation of the *left*, a direct heir of the french revolution, like many other harmful "isms".
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 07/11/2007 13:24 Comments || Top||

#3  I have no problem at all with the USa being a "Nation of immigrants", even if that's currently used to cover "excesses" to say the least, this is what you are, fine, and good for you. But Europe and european countries are not "Nations of immigrants", period.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 07/11/2007 13:26 Comments || Top||

#4  Turks to boycott "Integration Summit"

Sounds like they're assimilatin' jez fine.

Like I was just saying, simply ask for reciprocity ...

This is the key to dealing with all Islamic societies. The West had better begin demanding reciprocity on a number of issues. Freedom of religion should top the list. A Western ban on the practice of Islam needs to hinge on the MME (Muslim Middle East) ending religious intolerance. If Muslims want equal rights in Western countries then they'd damn well better start complying with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that all them signed in order to join the UN where they vote down so many of America's proposals. If Muslims want to squawk about "Islamophobia" then they'd better SHUT THE FUCK UP about genocide against the Jews. If Muslims want a stop to negative portrayals of Islam in the West then they'd better stop printing school textbooks showing Americans and Jews as pigs, dogs and monkeys. Reciprocity, it must become mandatory and no longer remain an option.
Posted by: Zenster || 07/11/2007 15:41 Comments || Top||

#5  Reciprocity is the foundation of civilisation.

It's absence from islam, means islamic countries absence from civilisation.

It's the basis of trade, law, property rights and liberty.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 07/11/2007 20:29 Comments || Top||

#6  Reciprocity is the foundation of civilisation.

Bravo, BP! Reciprocity is a one-word summation of the golden rule. Reciprocity is the bedrock of the social contract. Islam's refusal to recognize this basic fact excludes it from all further consideration as a player in civilized society.
Posted by: Zenster || 07/11/2007 20:42 Comments || Top||

#7  Here's why.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tit_for_tat

Add "Comparative advantage" and "Division of Labour" and you get the reason any western country could crush every muslim country.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 07/11/2007 21:17 Comments || Top||


Sarkozy tells Algeria: No apology for the past
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, due to start a one day visit to Algeria on Tuesday, defended his refusal to apologise for colonial misdeeds saying leaders should focus on the future and not “beat their breasts”. Algeria, France’s largest trading partner in Africa but also its touchiest former overseas possession, has long demanded that France apologise for killings during 132 years of colonial rule which ended with independence in 1962 after an eight year war.

Sarkozy, reiterating a long-held position, told Algeria’s El Watan and El Khabar newspapers: “Young people on either side of the Mediterranean are looking to the future more than the past and what they want are concrete things.” “They’re not waiting for their leaders to simply drop everything and start mortifying themselves, or to beat their breasts, over the mistakes of the past because, in that case, there’d be lots to do on both sides.” Sarkozy is due to arrive at about 1000 GMT on his first visit outside Europe since his election to the presidency in May. The Maghreb, a zone of French commercial influence, is traditionally the first destination outside Europe for newly elected French presidents.
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is a very important concept to get across in much of the potentially good Muslim world (as opposed to the majority of the Muslim world), that they should pay far more attention to the future than the past.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 07/11/2007 9:08 Comments || Top||

#2  I like this guy. He has some large cajunes. It is a "clear" message.
Posted by: JohnQC || 07/11/2007 9:27 Comments || Top||

#3  colonial misdeeds

Which include sewers, electricity, hospitals, etc [insert Monty Python 'Life of Brian' routine on "What have the Romans ever done for us?"]. It's not like the rest of Africa has grasped the future and shown skills and abilities to wrench its existence to catch up with the developed world much in the past forty years on their own. More like driving over a cliff. Its enough to actually give old fashion Euro colonialism a good name. What a match. Thinking about it, the snobbish paternalistic self important class conscious EU bureaucrat weenie in charge, as they desperately want to be, are just a bunch of wantabe old school African colonial administrators. When someone figures it out, maybe the Euros will save themselves and Africa by merging the lot of them again. It fits. Now drop the guilt routine and make everyone's life better.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 07/11/2007 10:49 Comments || Top||

#4  colonial misdeeds

Let's not get to carried away here. Yes, the Euros built roads, sewers, hospitals, etc., in their colonies.

Mostly for themselves and their own ability to exploit the colonies.

Let's not have rose-tinted glasses. The imperial powers treated the colonies and their inhaibitants poorly (at best). They exploited the natural resources for themselves and generally played the population off against each other to keep them under control.

And now after all that, the French, who were not the nicest imperialists, are telling their former vassals to 'look forward'.

That's not going to go over well, I predict.

Don't get me wrong, it's the right message.

But the wrong messenger.
Posted by: Steve White || 07/11/2007 11:06 Comments || Top||

#5  Go google the Monty Python bit. Of course the Romans did the stuff for themselves as well. However, in the greater perspective, after the initial incorporation, the locals generally benefited too. Notice that when the Romans disappeared the period that followed was known as the 'Dark Ages'. Things can be worse. And it has in Africa. All the natives have shown is that they can be even more exploitive and destructive than the former Euros. There is no perfect. And the demand for perfection results, as amply demonstrated, more hardship and lower life expediency for the majority of the people, while other parts of the world are actually evolving forward.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 07/11/2007 12:28 Comments || Top||

#6  Mr Steve White

Frnace invaded Algeria because she was tired of centuries of Islamic piratry. So in case there apologies to be given let start with the Algerians.
Posted by: JFM || 07/11/2007 12:59 Comments || Top||

#7  I disagree wholeheartedly. Nobody can move on until the sins of the past have been fully expiated through confession. Forgiveness follows repentance. Sarkozy should offer Algeria a full and unconditional apology and institute reparations for the destruction of Algiers and should immediately bulldoze all of the hideous colonialist architectural phallusses they built.


...right after Algeria apologises for hundreds of years of piracy, naval terrorism, for enslaving tens or hundreds of thousands of white europeans in the European slave trade and for slapping the French Consul in the face with a fly whisk.
Posted by: Admiral Allan Ackbar || 07/11/2007 13:12 Comments || Top||

#8  JFM - hold on, surely if Psarko grovels enough, Abu Qatada & the GSPC will "make friends, shake friends, never break friends again" too?

Everybody just needs to be more sorry.

And more Islamic.
Posted by: Admiral Allan Ackbar || 07/11/2007 13:17 Comments || Top||

#9  JFM has it down perfectly. The Algerians are scumbag liars who can't be trusted any further than one can throw their country. Look at how well they kept their end of the Evian Agreements for proof.
Posted by: Mac || 07/11/2007 20:17 Comments || Top||


Turkish opposition compromises on president
Turkey’s main opposition party on Tuesday agreed to an offer by Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan to seek a compromise candidate to elect as the next head of state after months of wrangling.

The ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party lost a battle with the secular elite, including opposition parties, generals and senior judges, to have its candidate, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, elected in parliament in May, triggering a political crisis. Parliament has now postponed the presidential contest until after a parliamentary election on July 22. “The prime minister’s words about compromise are a positive development ... We should find a candidate that could be supported by politicians, society and the armed forces,” Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal told leading Hurriyet newspaper in an interview published on Tuesday.

The CHP successfully blocked the appointment of Gul on the grounds that the party had not been consulted over the AK Party’s candidate and over concerns about Gul’s Islamist past.

Ahmet Necdet Sezer, a staunch secularist and frequent critic of the government, remains in office until a new president is elected. “The election of the president has greatly divided the people. We should select someone who has been outside of politics for a period,” Baykal said.
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Great White North
Canada flexes its muscles in scramble for the Arctic
It is not the kind of militaristic statement expected of the peace-loving Canadians. In front of a choreographed line-up of 120 sailors in their summer whites at a naval base outside Victoria in British Columbia, the prime minister, Stephen Harper, gave a warning to other nations with their eye on the potentially oil-rich Arctic. "Canada has a choice when it comes to defending our sovereignty over the Arctic," he said. "We either use it or lose it. And make no mistake, this government intends to use it."
Mr. Harper at least has some semblence of muscle to flex.
In other places at other times his words could be dismissed as posturing. But he backed them up with the chequebook, announcing that he was ordering up to eight military patrol ships that would be converted for use in ice up to a metre thick, and a new deep-water port that would service them. Total bill: C$7bn (£3.3bn).

Mr Harper's message, and the belligerent style in which it was delivered, are a sign that the Arctic, the vast ice-covered ocean around the North Pole, is hotting up - both literally, through global warming, and metaphorically as a political issue. With Canada, Denmark, Russia and the United States all having claims on the region, together with those of Iceland, Norway, Sweden and Finland, international tension in the region is mounting.
"All your ice are belong to us!"

Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Steve White || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hmmm. The words "Vladimir" and "Putin" seem to be missing from this article.
Posted by: Seafarious || 07/11/2007 0:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Looks like Canuck INTEL got wind of the "Take Back Alaska/Canada" rants from Russian Netters, or Putin's decision to base more boomer subs and strategic aviation in the northern Pacific and Arctic areas.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 07/11/2007 0:38 Comments || Top||

#3  Russians should not worry about Alaska/Canada, but about central eastern Sibiria. With their population dying out, it is only a matter of time when it will be taken over by Chinese, with very little resistance--not that Russians wouldn't want to resist, but there would be almost no one to resist with.
Posted by: twobyfour || 07/11/2007 0:58 Comments || Top||

#4  It will take mukluks on the ground to hold the Arctic regions.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 07/11/2007 9:36 Comments || Top||

#5  This is rubbish i keep getting told that peak oil is here NOW.

/moonbat
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 07/11/2007 10:12 Comments || Top||

#6  I'll stop believing in Peak Oil when a replacement for the super giant Ghawar field is discovered somewhere. Ain't gonna happen.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 07/11/2007 10:38 Comments || Top||

#7  We'll not likely discover the next oil field, we'll probably patent it. Several millenia of "alchemy" will disappear with a few bio- or molecular-engineering process patents, and we'll be making oil out of rearranged carbon atoms, say, from dirt. That, or nuclear generated hydrogen.

I wonder what the Arab League's "Plan B" is?
Posted by: Halliburton - Nanotech Oil Manufacturing Division || 07/11/2007 10:47 Comments || Top||

#8  May I suggest slicing up the Arctic like a pie, with countries getting slices equal to their northern boundaries on the outter edge, and tapored to meet at the center point. Russia wound no doubt get the largest slice, followed by Canada, the US, Denmark, and so on.
Since the US will never drill in it's pie slice, perhaps we can trade it to another country for land, i.e. Give permanent drilling rights to Mexico for Baha California.
Posted by: wxjames || 07/11/2007 10:53 Comments || Top||

#9  #7 -- I'll think we'll be back to using nuclear-generated carbohydrates just like our ancestors did. I grow mine in my garden.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 07/11/2007 11:03 Comments || Top||

#10  NO Arctic polar bear blood for oil!
Posted by: DarthVader || 07/11/2007 11:04 Comments || Top||

#11  A. the problem with slicing it up like a pie, is that doesnt work for shipping. Due to non-existent global warming, the NW passage is actually opening up, and may be a valuable shipping route. The US, Europe, and Japan all have substantial interests in that route being international waters, while the Canadians want to claim sovereignty over it.
Posted by: Liberalhawk || 07/11/2007 13:09 Comments || Top||

#12  I wonder what the Arab League's "Plan B" is?

I predict much seething.
Posted by: eLarson || 07/11/2007 14:18 Comments || Top||

#13  I wonder what the Arab League's "Plan B" is?

Dinner? Lunch? Both?
Posted by: tu3031 || 07/11/2007 14:19 Comments || Top||

#14  Due to non-existent global warming, the NW passage is actually opening up, and may be a valuable shipping route.

Really? For how much of the year? Can you name the first ship to take the NW passage?
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 07/11/2007 20:40 Comments || Top||

#15  In other places at other times his words could be dismissed as posturing. But he backed them up with the chequebook, announcing that he was ordering up to eight military patrol ships that would be converted for use in ice up to a metre thick, and a new deep-water port that would service them. Total bill: C$7bn (£3.3bn).

As long as the Canucks don't deploy their subs, no one should get hurt.
Posted by: mrp || 07/11/2007 21:24 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Big Three Networks Evening News Viewership Falls to Under 20 Million
That's less than 20 million (19,940,000) for all three combined, and a 5.4% drop from the low-water mark of a year ago. The 25-54 demo for all three nets was under 6 million (5,920,000), and their combined 25-54 demo ratings of 4.9/21 are down 14% and 19% from last year's 5.7/26. Ouch.

You don't suppose that almost 20 years of Media Research Center truth-telling about the relentless bias in the nets' evening news shows might have something to do with the ongoing decline? Nah, can't be (/sarcasm).
Posted by: Anonymoose || 07/11/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Don't blame Couric, she's done her part.
Posted by: Woozle Elmeter2970 || 07/11/2007 1:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Let's not leave out the steadfast and determined effort of Dan Rather.
Posted by: Zenster || 07/11/2007 2:01 Comments || Top||

#3  Seems Fred Thompson is the only one who's prepared to make good use of this info. Run Fred, Run!
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 07/11/2007 2:55 Comments || Top||

#4  Big Three Networks Evening News Viewership Falls to Under 20 Million

My Cockles are Feeling Purrfectally Toasty!

/and Ima'na send em all sum Depends.. ;-)
Posted by: RD || 07/11/2007 3:13 Comments || Top||

#5  Die, die, die...it can't happen fast enough.
Posted by: gromky || 07/11/2007 4:56 Comments || Top||

#6  I blame Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and the vast right wing conspiracy with Dan Rather deserving honorable mention :)
Posted by: Cluper Lumumba3694 || 07/11/2007 5:54 Comments || Top||

#7  It's all Katie's fault for not saying "sputum."
Posted by: Mike || 07/11/2007 6:10 Comments || Top||

#8  I'd watch SeeBS news if the staff would line up and slap Katie Curic on air.
Posted by: ed || 07/11/2007 7:18 Comments || Top||

#9  By a margin of 14 to 1, Americans find something better to do than watch Big News.
Posted by: eLarson || 07/11/2007 8:49 Comments || Top||

#10  I suspect news viewership declines are largely because the bulk of the population just doesn't give a s**t about news. The networks have tried to hold them with 24/7 (un)coverage of Paris Hilton and her kind, but all that did was drive the true news market away to Rantburg etc. (but we aren't anything close to a big enough market for Big Media to miss). The bias while dealing with the little real news they carry has also helped purge this market segment. Fox prospered, relatively, for a while, by collecting the left-bias-averse, but even when they had it all, it wasn't enough, so they brought us 24/7 Natalie Holloway. I fear for us more than for the networks.
Posted by: Glenmore || 07/11/2007 8:53 Comments || Top||

#11  Because of all that has been said above is why the dhimmicrats want to invoke the so-called "Fairness Doctrine" to regain control of the "message" being sent out.
Posted by: JohnQC || 07/11/2007 9:11 Comments || Top||

#12  Viewership is dropping because its audience is also dropping, literally. It's the WWII with some latency in the baby boomer generation. They're dying off. TV is no longer 'magic' for younger people for whom it is just another form of cultural static. A lot of people stick with stuff that is in their comfort zone, that gives them routine to frame their daily lives around. Even if it is, from the perspective of newer generations, crappy. It's why old people raise a fuss over tearing down dilapidated buildings and neighborhoods. It's their anchor to their existence even though its an albatross to everyone else's future.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 07/11/2007 9:17 Comments || Top||

#13  I haven't watched the evening news since '93. Get all my information from the internet (mostly the 'burg too).
Posted by: DarthVader || 07/11/2007 10:03 Comments || Top||

#14  This pisses me off! Where's that Nancy Boy I always slap around!
Posted by: Katie Couric || 07/11/2007 10:28 Comments || Top||

#15  Now if we can win some of the donk voters to become patriotic once again and vote for trunks, and capitolism, and responsibility, and put the lid on the PC bullshit finally, we have won the battle of our lives.
Self fulfillment over stupidity, dependency, and victimization.
Posted by: wxjames || 07/11/2007 11:01 Comments || Top||

#16  The network news lost me long ago because of the low information density. I could get more news from 3 minutes with a newspaper than 30 minutes with the hairdos ("right after this!"). I missed watching highlights from the OJ trial, but I think I'll live.
Posted by: James || 07/11/2007 11:26 Comments || Top||

#17  Add the NYTs and WaPo and LAT to the mix and you have a real decline that the ad people have been paying attention to - the real reason values are down and income is plummeting is lack of growth in ad dollars. Always follow the money.
Posted by: Jack is Back! || 07/11/2007 11:31 Comments || Top||

#18  We came to the table for meat and potatoes and they served up Twinkies.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305 || 07/11/2007 14:58 Comments || Top||

#19  I have not watched the Broadcast networks for so long.... What were their names again?
Posted by: 3dc || 07/11/2007 15:15 Comments || Top||

#20 

She's doing her best, and that's the truth!
Posted by: BigEd || 07/11/2007 17:35 Comments || Top||

#21  Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Posted by: Anonymoose || 07/11/2007 22:18 Comments || Top||

#22  Jeebus, 'moose!

Give us a warning, 'mk?

:-(}
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 07/11/2007 22:35 Comments || Top||

#23  ALIEN!!!!
Posted by: Zenster || 07/11/2007 23:09 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
28[untagged]
14Taliban
10Iraqi Insurgency
4Hamas
4al-Qaeda
3Govt of Iran
2Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh
2Global Jihad
2Islamic Courts
2al-Qaeda in Iraq
2al-Qaeda in North Africa
2Thai Insurgency
2al-Qaeda in Britain
2Govt of Syria
1TNSM
1al-Tawhid
1Govt of Sudan
1Harkatul Mujahideen
1Iraqi Baath Party
1ISI
1Mahdi Army
1Moro Islamic Liberation Front
1Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal
1Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan

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